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Toronto book festival gets $200,000 to expand to the rest of Ontario

On January 6, the International Festival of Authors (IFOA),Canada's largest literary festival, announced it had received a $200,000 grantfrom the Ontario Trillium Foundation to expand its two-year-old IFOA Ontarioprogram, through which it organizes literary events in locations outside ofToronto. There will be at least a part-time project co-ordinator job created by the funding, with more staff to follow as it expands.

In 2009, there were 10 events featuring Canadian andinternational authors in seven locations run by the IFOA, which is part ofHarbourfront Centre. They were mostly north and west of Toronto, includingBarrie, Burlington, Midland and Parry Sound.

The money is meant for research and development, as well ashelping to set up infrastructure in locations around the province to facilitate literary events and take advantage of the authors who come to the internationally renowned Torontofestival from around thecountry and world.

According to IFOA director Geoffrey Taylor, new locationsbeing considered include Kingston, St Catharines, Sudbury and Thunder Bay.

"It's not about going to these places and showing them howwe do it in the big city," says Taylor, who's been with the IFOA for more thantwo decades. "It's about trying to create something so that they can do itthemselves."

Taylor estimates it cost between $80,000 to $90,000 in cashto run the program in 2009, in rough tandem with the Toronto events, though hestresses there was a good deal more spent by the festival and localcommunities, in staff time and goods in kind. By any calculation, though, a$200,000 injection is a major boon.

"IFOA can't really grow much," Taylor says of the festival'sToronto incarnation, which already maxes out its Harbourfront facilities andvenues, "but IFOA Ontario can be as large or larger than the festival."

"It's quite possible," he adds, "that in the future, we'llbe bringing authors in just for this program exclusively."

-- Bert Archer


Magna gets $7.2-million boost from NRC partnership

On the heels of one of the worst years the North Americancar industry has ever seen, the National Research Council has announced apartnership with auto parts maker Magna International Inc., to develop what itdescribes as "lighter, more durable parts that are safer, affordable,environmentally friendly and fuel-efficient."

Magna Exteriors and Interiors, based in Concord, Ontario,will use a new $7.2-million research and development centre to work on newcomposite materials.

"Automotive suppliers and original equipment manufacturersthat lead the industry in innovation and productivity know that vehicles of thefuture will need more composite content in order to provide the fuel economy,utility and safety that consumers demand," says Bob Brownlee, president of the division. "TheMagna-NRC Composite Centre of Excellence will help reinforce Magna's positionas a supplier of lightweight, cost-effective composite solutions to the globalautomotive market."

According to Magna International co-chief executive DonWalker, lighter materials are necessary to reduce a car's energy requirementsand would allow smaller, more market-friendly batteries onboard electric cars.

Magna already has a contract to build the electric drivetrains of the all-electric 2011 Ford Focus.

Research was to begin immediately, and the new facilitieswill be up and running by the summer.

Writer: Bert Archer


EnviroTower innovation serves up a tall, cool one and helps business save 15% on energy costs

Standing taller than just another product or technology, EnviroTower provides a means for companies to switch to a clean cooling tower water treatment system versus going "bareback" and dumping chemically-treated water back into the municipal wastewater system. That's so 1980s. And yet, each year, tens of thousands of litres of chemically-treated water enters wastewater systems after being used to keep most large buildings and factories cool. What better way for any earth-respecting corporate citizen to walk the green talk than to invest in this firm's solution?

In a nutshell, EnviroTower's innovative system cuts both the amount of chemicals used as well as water and energy requirements during treatment, while ensuring that scale and corrosion in a water tower is kept to a minimum via an intricate monitoring system.

Founded in 2004 and calling its 380 Adelaide Street West digs in Toronto home, the comprehensive and financially rewarding EnviroTower solution includes the patented water treatment system and web-based remote system monitoring capabilities, all supported by a customer service program designed to ensure its' large enterprise clientele receive the maximum return on their clean cooling tower water treatment system investments.

Led by CEO Paul Wickberg, the company has gained the endorsement of some of North America's largest and most demanding commercial real estate organizations. EnviroTower officials credit its continued growth on the ability to deliver consistent, reliable results. EnviroTower's customers include the likes of IBM, Hilton Hotels, Marriott Hotels, and Wal-Mart; each reportedly realizing an average savings of 15 per cent on their cooling system's energy draw and 20 per cent on water consumption annually.

EnviroTower's North American service is provided by its own service representatives, supported by in-house leading water industry engineers who perform on-site system analysis, design, training, testing, reporting, performance validation and ongoing consultation and support.

Writer: Liam Lahey
498 research and innovation Articles | Page: | Show All
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